Issue 1
8 articles- pp. 1-4
Prologue
Howard B. Levine & Gail S. Reed - pp. 5-21
Yes and No: The Complexities of Compliance in the Clinical Situation
Ana-María Rizzuto - pp. 22-39
The Defensive Uses of Compliance
Michael Feldman - pp. 40-60
The Ambiguity of Influence: Suggestion and Compliance in the Analytic Process
Howard B. Levine - pp. 61-81
Compliance as Cooperation, Compliance as Defensive: One Example of Dialectic Tension in the Clinical Exchange
Joseph D. Lichtenberg - pp. 82-96
Analysts Who Submit and Patients Who Comply: Sadomasochistic Transference/Countertransference Interchanges and Their Rationalizations
Gail S. Reed - pp. 97-113
Discussion: Some Aspects of Compliance in Psychoanalytic Treatment
Gerald I. Fogel - pp. 114-117
Epilogue
Howard B. Levine & Gail S. Reed
Issue 2
14 articles- pp. 119-124
Prologue
Dilys Daws - pp. 125-141
The Training of Child Psychotherapists at the Tavistock Clinic: Philosophy and Practice
Margaret Rustin - pp. 142-145
Infant Observation as a Precursor of Clinical Training
Lisa Miller - pp. 146-159
Adapting the Tavistock Model of Infant Observation to Work in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit
Diane Boyer & Pamela Sorensen - pp. 160-171
The Development of the Concept of Time in Fostered and Adopted Children
Hamish Canham - pp. 172-184
Motiveless Malignity: Problems in the Psychotherapy of Psychopathic Patients
Anne Alvarez - pp. 185-200
From Individual to Institution: How the Psychotherapy of a Mentally Handicapped Girl Has Informed My Consultation Work in a School
Louise Emanuel - pp. 201-214
“The Ghost of an Idea….”: On Scrooge, Internal Worlds and Attachment Patterns
Janet Philps - pp. 215-228
Assessing Adolescents: Process or Procedure—The Problems of Thinking About Thinking
Margot Waddell - pp. 229-242
Narcissistic Illusions in Late Adolescence: The Role of Defensive and Gratifying Object-Relationships and Generative Opportunities
Juliet Hopkins - pp. 243-253
On Different Introjective Processes and the Hypothesis of an “Omega Function”
Gianna Williams - pp. 254-266
Facts and Fiction: An Exploration of Parent Work With Two Maternally Deprived Mothers
Judith Green Loose - pp. 267-278
Parent—Infant Psychotherapy: Remembering the Oedipus Complex
Dilys Daws - pp. 279
Epilogue
Dilys Daws & Judith Green Loose
Issue 3
11 articles- pp. 281-288
Prologue
Elizabeth M. Carr - pp. 289-308
Wounded But Still Walking: One Man's Effort to Move Out of Shame
Elizabeth M. Carr - pp. 309-319
Trauma, Shame Conflicts, and Affect Regression: Discussion of “Wounded But Still Walking”
Leon Wurmser - pp. 320-331
Walking Taller, Though Still Wounded: A Discussion of “Wounded But Still Walking: One Man's Effort to Move Out of Shame”
Andrew P. Morrison - pp. 332-346
Shame Conceived from the Perspective of Compromise Formation Theory
Arnold Rothstein - pp. 347-361
Shame and the Idea of a Central Affect
Melvin R. Lansky - pp. 362-372
Wrestling with Proteus: The Many Forms of Shame
Benjamin Kilborne - pp. 373-387
The Role of Affect Integration and Regulation in Disorders of the Self
Barnet D. Malin - pp. 388-406
Shame and Guilt: A Synthesis
Sydney E. Pulver - pp. 407-419
The Experts Give Their Views of a Case Report of Shame: A Commentary on Diversity
Joseph D. Lichtenberg - pp. 420-421
Epilogue
Elizabeth M. Carr
Issue 4
9 articles- pp. 423
Dedication
Joseph D. Lichtenberg - pp. 424-447
Prologue
Diana Diamond & Sidney J. Blatt - pp. 448-480
Points of Contact and Divergence Between Psychoanalytic and Attachment Theories: Is Psychoanalytic Theory Truly Different
Peter Fonagy - pp. 481-540
Second-Generation Effects of Unresolved Trauma in Nonmaltreating Parents: Dissociated, Frightened, and Threatening Parental Behavior
Erik Hesse & Mary Main - pp. 541-575
Attachment Theory and Psychoanalysis: Further Differentiation Within Insecure Attachment Patterns
Kenneth N. Levy & Sidney J. Blatt - pp. 576-617
The Two-Person Unconscious: Intersubjective Dialogue, Enactive Relational Representation, and the Emergence of New Forms of Relational Organization
Karlen Lyons-Ruth - pp. 618-646
The Development of Caregiving: A Comparison of Attachment Theory and Psychoanalytic Approaches to Mothering
Carol George & Judith Solomon - pp. 647-661
Discussion
Joseph D. Lichtenberg - pp. 662-667
Epilogue
Diana Diamond & Sidney J. Blatt
Issue 5
11 articles- pp. 669-681
Prologue
Diana Diamond & Sidney J. Blatt - pp. 681
Mary D. Salter Ainsworh, Ph.D. 1913-1999
Mary D. Salter Ainsworh - pp. 682-736
Mary D. Salter Ainsworth: Tribute and Portrait
Mary Main - pp. 737-756
Negative Maternal Attributions: Effects on Toddlers' Sense of Self
Alicia F. Lieberman - pp. 757-783
Understanding the Dissociative Processes: The Contribution of Attachment Theory
Giovanni Liotti - pp. 784-796
How Attachment Theory Can Contribute to the Understanding of Affective Functioning in Psychoanalysis
Massimo Ammaniti - pp. 797-830
Representation, Symbolization, and Affect Regulation in the Concomitant Treatment of a Mother and Child: Attachment Theory and Child Psychotherapy
Arietta Slade - pp. 831-884
Borderline Conditions and Attachment: A Preliminary Report
Diana Diamond, John Clarkin, Hilary Levine, Ken Levy, Pamela Foelsch & Frank Yeomans - pp. 885-921
“States of Mind with Respect to Attachment” and Change in a Psychotherapeutic Relationship: A Study of the Coherence of Transcript in a Short-Term Psychotherapy with an Adolescent
Sergio Muscetta, Nino Dazzi, Alessandra De Coro, Francesca Ortu & Anna Maria Speranza - pp. 922-937
Discussion
Joseph D. Lichtenberg - pp. 938-941
Epilogue
Diana Diamond & Sidney J. Blatt